Closure with oxygen scavenger

a technology of oxygen scavenger and antioxidant, applied in the field of closure, can solve the problems of oxygen contamination of the product being stored therein, adverse effects of oxygen exposure on the efficacy of oxygen-containing products, and the impact of oxygen-containing products on the efficacy of pharmaceuticals

Inactive Publication Date: 2006-05-18
PHOENIX CLOSURES
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

[0007] The invention described herein relates to a closure that is able to prevent oxygen from entering the container upon which the closure is attached. Preferably, the closure is comprised of one piece wholly molded of plastic, oxygen scavenging or anti-oxidant compounds with catalysts homogenously mixed therein. More preferably, the closure is a composition of polypropylene or high-density polyethylene with an oxygen scavenger and catalyst integrated within the polypropylene or high-density polyethylene. Most preferably, the closure is a composition consisting essentially of polypropylene or high-density polyethylene with the oxygen scavenger sodium sulfite and a weakly acidic catalyst dispersed substantially evenly throughout.

Problems solved by technology

Many different kinds of packaged products, such as food, beverages and pharmaceuticals, can be adversely impacted through exposure to oxygen.
The presence of oxygen in a package can cause oxygen contamination of the product being stored therein.
The reaction of oxygen with pharmaceuticals can impact their efficacy.
This reaction can cause the rapid degradation of the product.
Further, only a slight amount of oxygen is necessary to eventually cause adverse effects in food.
However, using this method to remove substantially all oxygen is often times commercially unfeasible because of cost or time restraints.
However, even when a container is initially sealed with substantially no oxygen in the container, oxygen may enter the container by, for example, migrating through the container or closure material, especially at the closure / container interface.
This is especially a problem with many plastics which, in their natural state, are partially porous as to oxygen.
However, manufacturing containers with multiple layers can be complex, time consuming, and expensive.

Method used

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Examples

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Embodiment Construction

[0009] The invention is a closure comprised of a composition that is capable of preventing oxygen from entering a container once the closure is attached thereto. Preferably, the closure is a rigid, unitary structure that does not require additional, separate layers in order to block oxygen.

[0010] In the food and beverage industry, because of their ease of use and low cost, it is often desirable to use plastic closures or caps to close a container. However, typical plastic closures allow oxygen to migrate through them and enter the closed container. Additionally, oxygen leakage can occur at the interface between the closure and the container. This oxygen can then react with the food or beverage and result in a product of lesser quality. To resolve this problem, some have added additional layers of material called liners into the cap top to prevent the oxygen from passing into the closed container. However, these additional layers can add substantial cost.

[0011] The current inventio...

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Abstract

A closure that is able to prevent oxygen from entering the container upon which the closure is attached. Preferably, the closure is comprised of one piece wholly molded of plastic, oxygen scavenging or anti-oxidant compounds, and catalysts homogenously mixed therein. More preferably, the closure is a composition of polypropylene or high-density polyethylene with an oxygen scavenger and catalyst integrated within the polypropylene or high-density polyethylene.

Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION [0001] This invention relates to a closure and more specifically to a closure with anti-oxidant or oxygen scavenger properties. BACKGROUND ART [0002] Many different kinds of packaged products, such as food, beverages and pharmaceuticals, can be adversely impacted through exposure to oxygen. The presence of oxygen in a package can cause oxygen contamination of the product being stored therein. The reaction of oxygen with chemicals present in foods and beverages can impact their odor and flavor. The reaction of oxygen with pharmaceuticals can impact their efficacy. [0003] Molecular oxygen (O2) can react with a number of different compounds that are found in a number of foods and beverages. Molecular oxygen can be reduced by other molecules through the addition of electrons to form, e.g., a superoxide, a hydroxyl radical, or hydrogen peroxide. Each of these reduced forms of oxygen are very reactive and are thus likely to react with a number of products in the foo...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): C01B3/00
CPCA23L3/3436B65D51/244C01B13/0281
Inventor EKKERT, LEN
Owner PHOENIX CLOSURES
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